Manitoba

Winnipeg pools eyeball surveillance cameras

Winnipeg may install surveillance cameras at pools to deter sexual predators.

Community services wants 333K for closed-circuit means of deterring sexual predators

The City of Winnipeg has launched a child-abuse public-awareness campaign in conjunction with efforts to better educate city staff at pools. Now, the city is considering installing surveillance cameras. (City of Winnipeg)

Winnipeg may install surveillance cameras at pools to deter sexual predators.

The city's community services department has asked city councillors to consider spending $333,000 on closed-circuit cameras to "deal with potential incidents of child exploitation and to deter criminal behaviour" at aquatic facilities. 

"The upgrades will introduce modern, cutting-edge surveillance tools directly in aquatic facilities, providing highly-detailed camera imaging combined with a broad inter-facility camera distribution network that will allow for the surveillance of high-traffic areas within each facility in order to identify individuals engaged in unusual behaviour," states a request that comes before council's innovation committee on Tuesday.

The city has been working with the Canadian Centre for Child Protection to develop a new program aimed at combating child sexual abuse. It has resulted in risk assessments of city facilities, new protocols for reporting incidents of suspected child sexual abuse and modernized staff training that will start at city pools and aquatic centres.